Seven bodies have been recovered from a cold storage facility at a
Karachi airport Tuesday morning, more than a day after a deadly militant
attack there left 29 people dead.
The seven cargo workers
were found in a facility next to the hall where a fire broke out during
the attack, Sindh province Health Minister Dr. Saghir Ahmad said. Heavy
machinery was used to break into the area to retrieve them.Rescuers had been trying
to reach the cargo workers who were trapped inside the cold storage
facility at Jinnah International Airport, the largest and busiest
airport in Pakistan.
Families of the workers
blocked a busy road leading to the airport, demanding that authorities
help find their relatives, CNN affiliate Geo TV reported."We will work to
investigate any negligence in rescue efforts by the authorities and
those found guilty of negligence will be punished accordingly," Sindh
province Gov. Ishrat Ul Ebad Khan said.The rescue operation
unfolded nearly a day after terrorists entered the airport from two
places with a plan to destroy a group of parked airplanes and "bring
down our aviation industry," according to the Pakistani government.
It was late Sunday night,
and the militants were armed with guns, grenades and suicide vests.
They went into the cargo area, about a kilometer (0.62 miles) from where
commercial planes take off.
In a "heroic" effort,
security forces "laid down their lives" to block the terminal and stop
the attackers, surrounding them and killing all of them, the prime
minister's office said.
There were 10 terrorists, military spokesman Maj. Gen. Asim Bajwa said, and two of them detonated suicide vests.
By the time the attack was over, officials said 29 people were dead, including 10 militants. Another 24 people were injured, the military said.The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the assault on the country's largest and busiest airport.Speaking from an
undisclosed location, Pakistani Taliban commander Abdullah Bahar said
the attack was retaliation for the death of former chief Hakimullah
Mehsud, who was killed in a U.S. drone strike in November in North
Waziristan.Bahar warned more attacks will follow."As long as we are breathing, our attacks will be continuing 'til the end of our lives," he vowed.
Fire followed attack
A building caught fire in the attack, but no planes were damaged, Bajwa said. The airport reopened Monday.Some Pakistani media
reported a renewed gunbattle at the airport later Monday morning. But
officials told CNN the noise was from fire-heated chemical containers
exploding.
Still, as a precaution,
security forces opened fire, said Ahmad Chinoy of the Citizen's Police
Liaison Committee. He said he was 100% sure there were no militants left
in the airport.
Several days ago,
Pakistan's government had warned provincial officials of a possible
"high-profile attack on a sensitive or key installation," said Qaim Ali
Shah, chief minister of Sindh province. But the warning, he said, did
not mention the airport.
'We felt like sitting ducks'
Farooq Sattar, a member of parliament, was on a plane at the airport when the attack took place.
"My aircraft was on the
tarmac ready to take off when suddenly, from what I understand, a
message came to the pilot saying to get off the runway and return to the
gate," Sattar said. "I heard shots and saw smoke.""Before the pilot could
announce anything, I had text messages blowing up my phone saying
'Karachi airport under attack.' We were in the aircraft for three hours,
full of fuel. They locked the doors.
"The airport was poorly
guarded. It was only due to some airport security personnel that the
attack got thwarted and the militants didn't make it to our part of the
airport. Passengers were extremely nervous. They started looking at me
for answers."
"We felt like sitting ducks on the tarmac," he added.
Two crew members who were on their first ever flight "freaked out," Sattar said.
History of terror
The Pakistani Taliban,
which is formally known as Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, has long
conducted an insurgency against the Pakistani government."Their primary target is the Pakistani state and its military," said Raza Rumi of the Jinnah Institute, a Pakistani think tank."It resents the fact that (Pakistan) has an alliance with the West, and it wants Sharia to be imposed in Pakistan."
The group claimed
responsibility for a December 2009 suicide bombing at the United States'
Forward Operating Base Chapman in Khost, Afghanistan.
The attack killed seven U.S. citizens, including five CIA officers and a member of Jordanian intelligence.The U.S. Justice Department charged Mehsud in 2010 for his alleged involvement in the attack.Mehsud took over from
Baitullah Mehsud, a fellow clan member, in 2009 after the latter was
killed in a U.S. drone strike. Four years later, Hakimullah Mehsud
suffered the same fate.
More claims and threats
Another TTP member
claimed the Pakistani government has been "abducting and killing
innocent people," and explained why the airport was targeted.
"We chose a location
where there would be less civilian and more official casualties," TTP
representative Shahidullah Shahid said.
Shahid warned the group will engage "in a full-out war with the Pakistani state, starting on June 10."
But "if even now the Pakistani government backs down," Shahid said, "we are ready to engage in meaningful dialogue."
The airport wasn't the only site of violence in Pakistan on Sunday.
Twin suicide attacks
near the border with Iran left 24 people dead, including four
terrorists, authorities said. Qambar Dashti, commissioner of the Quetta
Division, said two suicide bombers blew themselves up in a hotel where
dozens of Shia pilgrims from Iran were staying.
Dashti said 14 out of 18 wounded pilgrims were in critical condition.
Extremist Sunni militant group Jaish el-Islam, a splinter group of Lashkar e Jhangvi, claimed responsibility.On Monday, while Karachi operated as usual, there was violence in other parts of the country.Three soldiers were
killed and many others were wounded in a suspected suicide attack at a
checkpoint in North Waziristan, military officials said.
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